Find or Sell Motorcycles & Scooters in USA

2007 Yamaha V Star Silverado on 2040-motos

$4,998
YearYear:2007 MileageMileage:6349 ColorColor: Raven
QR code
2007 Yamaha V Star Silverado , $4,998, image 1

Yamaha V Star photos

2007 Yamaha V Star Silverado , $4,998, image 2 2007 Yamaha V Star Silverado , $4,998, image 3 2007 Yamaha V Star Silverado , $4,998, image 4 2007 Yamaha V Star Silverado , $4,998, image 5 2007 Yamaha V Star Silverado , $4,998, image 6 2007 Yamaha V Star Silverado , $4,998, image 7

Yamaha V Star tech info

TypeType:Cruiser PhonePhone:(888) 508-7660

Yamaha V Star description

2007 Yamaha V Star Silverado, YAMAHA V STAR 650 SILVERADO COMES WITH FACTORY WINDSHIELD, SADDLEBAGS, AND BACKREST!!! - ROAD-TRIP READY. With a dressed-out V Star Silverado, you'll know how there's nothing more satisfying than the relaxed beat of a V-twin out on the highway. Except maybe the knowledge that you didn't have to spend a fortune to get there.

Moto blog

Yamaha Tops Second Day of Sepang Test as Honda Twiddles Thumbs

Wed, 29 Feb 2012

Ben Spies topped the time sheets ahead of teammate Jorge Lorenzo as Yamaha continued its MotoGP pre-season testing in Malaysia. While their rivals at Honda were idled by an engine problem, the two factory Yamaha riders found improvement on their Day One times and gathered data about riding in both wet and dry conditions. Spies set the best lap time at 2:01.285 while testing different chassis settings in the morning.

Lorenzo Wants to Race at Assen Despite Breaking Collarbone in Three Places

Fri, 28 Jun 2013

Jorge Lorenzo underwent two hours of surgery earlier this morning in Barcelona, Spain, to insert eight screws and a titanium plate to secure his fractured collarbone. By the afternoon, the Yamaha rider was back in the Netherlands to prove he is healthy enough to race in tomorrow’s TT Assen. The reigning MotoGP champion broke his collarbone in three places after high-siding in a wet practice session Thursday.

Air time Kenny Roberts-style

Thu, 25 Nov 2010

I can’t get enough of pictures that capture a specific, hard to define moment; the successful encapsulation of the absolute balls-to-the-wall, life or death commitment that riding a motorbike as fast as possible involves.  We all know. We’ve all been there – even if it’s only a once-in-a-lifetime moment. Maybe (for us mere mortals) it’s that rapidly, yet unexpectedly, tightening left-hand bend with a shitty, mud-covered veneer just at the apex.